MrBuddyTrinity And Beyond showed the nice version and I don't remember it telling you the details of what was happening. The anti-nuclear movie Dark Circle showed the really nauseating version, although Dark Circle played fast and loose with "facts" (i.e. didn't do any checking and just make stuff up), the video is undeniable.

RockBoltDark Circle worth seeing? I hate poorly researched propaganda documentaries, but if it has some decent rare footage I should probably hunt it down

MrBuddyRockBolt: If you're looking for rare footage of nuclear power plants and nuclear weapon making then Dark Circle has a ton of it. It's not a movie for general audiences like "Trinity and Beyond" is but if you're a nuclear nerd it will hold your attention to say the least.

The movie mostly focuses on Rocky Flats, America's troubled, atomic bomb, recycling pant, which was torn down a few years ago. As long as you prepare yourself to see some disturbing stuff, you'll be alright. I had no idea what I was about to watch and it was like being kicked in the nuts, but the next time I saw it I was fine. Some of the "facts" are exaggerated to the point they no longer reference reality, some facts skip over other important facts (like the nuclear a reactor that was intentionally blown up, was later put back together and continued running) and there is mention a reactor that was blown up however there's no record of such a test taking place. The problem is some of the wild things the movie tells you are 100%, verifiably true and it's almost impossible to know which is which.

RockBoltGood old Rocky Flats, yeah I live in Denver. Sounds like its worth tracking down, thanks for the info!

The flash heated dark areas like roads so that when the shock wave traveled along them it could move much faster do to less resistance. This was called a precursor wave and they would tear the turrets and tracks off of tanks and throw jeeps hundreds of yards down the blast line.